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  #1  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2006, 5:09 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by FourOneFive
^ why doesn't their vision mention anything about an extension to Monterey, Santa Cruz, or Salinas?

does anyone know if there was ever passenger rail service on the peninsula on the other side of the coastal ranges (i.e. pacifica, half moon bay)? i've heard there was freight service of some kind at one time.
A little bit of info..probly out of date.
http://www.tamcmonterey.org/prog_rail/index.html
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Old Posted Sep 3, 2006, 10:48 PM
Richard Mlynarik Richard Mlynarik is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by FourOneFive
^ why doesn't their vision mention anything about an extension to Monterey, Santa Cruz, or Salinas?
Perhaps because it's hopeless to even think about it.

Quote:
Originally Posted by =FourOneFive
^ does anyone know if there was ever passenger rail service on the peninsula on the other side of the coastal ranges (i.e. pacifica, half moon bay)? i've heard there was freight service of some kind at one time.
"Ocean Shore Railroad"
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Old Posted Sep 3, 2006, 11:02 PM
FourOneFive FourOneFive is offline
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thanks richard. there were some great sites that pulled up through google. here's an image of the old route:



here's an interesting tidbit:

The railroad line had several stops in Pacifica-Edgemar, Salada, Brighton, Vallemar, Rockaway, Tobin-before plunging into a 354-foot tunnel through San Pedro Mountain. It resurfaced at the edge of the high cliffs, 700 feet above the crashing surf. This dramatic ride caused a great deal of trouble for the rail line, because the roadbed was built on an unstable piece of shifting mountainside known, appropriately, as Devil's Slide.

whatever happened to this tunnel?
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Old Posted Sep 5, 2006, 4:56 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by FourOneFive

whatever happened to this tunnel?
From what I've been told, during WW2 they were blown shut to keep them from beeing a safe haven for japanese...if they chose to invade..
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Old Posted Sep 4, 2006, 1:23 AM
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^ Sweet map. There are a ton of stops out there, each 100 person community must have had a station back then.
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Old Posted Sep 7, 2006, 2:55 PM
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http://www.insidebayarea.com/ci_4293580?source=rss

Agencies release I-580 documents

Environmental report to support eastbound lane addition project

By Rebecca F. Johnson, STAFF WRITER

Three transportation agencies released an environmental document that will enable the proposed Interstate 580 eastbound high occupancy vehicle lane project to proceed as planned if approved after a public review period.

The Federal Highway Administration, California Department of Transportation and Alameda County Congestion Management Agency are collaborating on the project, which will extend from Hacienda Drive in Pleasanton toeast of the Greenville Road exit in Livermore and be built in the median.

The addition of the lanes is aimed at reducing congestion and delays that occur during commute hours. I-580 through the Livermore Valley is part of a goods movement corridor that extends from the Port of Oakland to the Central Valley.

"This is the second most congested freeway segment in the entire Bay region," said Dennis Fay, executive director of the county agency. "The (HOV lanes) are just phase one of a series of improvements we expect to make on this segment of freeway."

The eastbound project was selected first because it could be built relatively more easily than lanes in the westbound direction, Fay said.

The environmental assessment and initial study reveals that some mitigation measures must be completed, such as replacement of shrubs and reconstruction of existing drainage facilities.

However, because the project will be constructed on the existing highway and no significant environmental impacts are anticipated, the transportation agencies will gauge whether there is a need for a public hearing before proceeding with the project.

"We are waiting to see what the interests are out there," said Brigetta Smith, Caltrans public information officer.

The first phase of the project, which will include ramp meters, traffic monitoring equipment and other preliminary work, is expected to begin later this year. The county agency is currently soliciting bids for the work. The construction of the lanes is poised to begin late next year.
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  #7  
Old Posted Sep 8, 2006, 5:42 AM
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Published Wednesday, September 6, 2006, by Marin Independent Journal

Novato rail stop won't be at Los Robles mobile home park

By Rob Rogers

A controversial train station near a Novato mobile home park
could be relocated to the former Hamilton air base under a plan
recommended by city staff.

But residents of the Los Robles Mobile Home Park, who have
vigorously campaigned against a proposed Sonoma Marin Area Rail
Transit (SMART) station near the gates of their neighborhood on
Nave Drive, say they'd be less than thrilled with the substitution.

"This is just as disastrous," said Gail Atkinson, a steering
committee member for the Los Robles Mobile Home Community
Homeowners' League. "This would be devastating to any residential
community."


Plans for the SMART project, which would establish a light rail
corridor between the two counties, currently call for Novato
stations near some of the city's largest employers.

One station, on Redwood Boulevard between San Marin Drive and Rush
Landing Road, would be a short distance from the Fireman's Fund
insurance company. Another, located on Nave Drive south of Bel
Marin Keys Boulevard, would provide access to the Bel Marin Keys
industrial park.

The Novato City Council previously recommended both stations to the
SMART board. Following an outcry by Los Robles residents, however,
who argued that a station so close to their neighborhood could
cause health and safety problems, the council agreed on July 18
to recommend new sites for those stations.


After working with SMART staff members, city officials have
recommended moving the Nave Drive station to Hamilton's Main Gate
Road. The City Council will consider that recommendation at its
Sept. 12 meeting.

While council members had not yet reviewed or discussed those
recommendations as of Tuesday, most said they supported moving the
station away from the mobile home park.

"There is no question that the Bel Marin Keys site had to be
changed," said Councilwoman Pat Eklund. "The impacts to the
residents of Los Robles far exceeds any rationale for keeping it
there."

In addition, many council members advocated moving the Redwood
Boulevard station to a location closer to downtown Novato.

"I haven't studied the recommendation, but I'd like to see a station
where people shop," said Councilwoman Judy Arnold. "I'd like to see
it in one of two downtown locations, either at the intersection of
Redwood and Olive or near the (planned) Whole Foods development. And
rather than having a station at Hamilton or Los Robles, I'd like to
look at the area by Highway 37."

But Eklund, who is opposing Arnold in a race for county supervisor,
said station locations should take into consideration where Novato
residents live, as well as where they work and shop.

"I think we need to explore a downtown site," Eklund said. "But I
don't think we should base all of our rail stations on employment
centers. That's making the assumption that people who ride the train
will live in Sonoma County and work in Marin. We need some
discussion about placing stations near where people live."

Los Robles resident Atkinson disagrees.

"It needs to be near a commercial area, like the downtown," she
said. "I'd hoped it would be somewhere like Rowland Boulevard, and
not near people's residences."

Jeff Johnston, president of the Hamilton Homeowners Association,
said he hoped any potential station on Main Gate Road would be
located far from any homes. [BATN: Yes, be sure to keep it far from
anyone who may be tempted not have to drive everywhere all the time.]

"There's a new moderate-income housing development that could be
affected by this," said Johnston, who has fought to limit fumes from
diesel trucks along Hamilton's Todd Road. "It would be unfortunate
if this was to impact anybody."

Councilwoman Jeanne Mac Leamy said she planned to keep an open mind
in evaluating all possible station locations.

"We're going to look at every possible site, with the information
that the SMART and city staff used to determine what locations are
available," Mac Leamy said. "We need a station for the northern part
of town and one for the southern part, and we have to look at what's
best for all residents. It can't be about politics."

Whatever decision the council makes regarding the proposed stations,
it needs to make it soon, said Mayor Carole Dillon-Knutson, who
represents Novato on the SMART advisory board.

"We're always open to public input," Dillon-Knutson said. "But we
need to have those stations well settled before SMART goes on the
ballot in November."

MEETING

The Novato City Council will discuss the matter at a 6:30 p.m.
meeting on Sept. 12 at the Novato Unified School District
headquarters at 1015 Seventh St. For information, call 415-899-8903.


Contact Rob Rogers via e-mail at rrogers@...
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"This will not be known as the Times Square of the West," City Council President Alex Padilla declared last week. "Times Square will be known as the L.A. Live of the East."

Will Rogers once said, "children in San Francisco are taught two things: love the Lord and hate Los Angeles."
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  #8  
Old Posted Sep 8, 2006, 8:28 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by EastBayHardCore
said Johnston . . . "It would be unfortunate
if this was to impact anybody."
That's one way to look at it, I suppose.
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  #9  
Old Posted Sep 8, 2006, 1:30 PM
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Oasis Hong Kong Airlines coming to OAK

Pictures: Long-haul low-cost start-up Oasis Hong Kong Airlines unveils livery, sets launch date for October 25
By Justin Wastnage

Start-up long-haul low-fares carrier Oasis Hong Kong Airlines has unveiled the livery for its two Boeing 747-400s that will operate from 25 October on its route to London Gatwick airport from its Hong Kong base.

Tickets for the route went on sale yesterday, with 10% of the aircraft available at the headline fare level of HK$1,000 ($129) one way plus tax, the company pledged. The airline will offer business class fares from HK$7,000 with a maximum of HK$20,000, says chief executive Stephen Miller.

The livery (pictured below) was created by a Japanese design agency to include the colours of the Chinese city-state's flag combined with rays of sunshine signifying the nighttime schedule of the carrier that delivers passengers at dawn at their destination, says Oasis creative consultant Priscilla Hwang Lee.


Flights will initially be operated four times per week, rising to daily in November, with two ex-Singapore Airlines 747-400s that were acquired earlier this year.

Route licences were secured late last year allowing Oasis to operate scheduled services to Berlin, Cologne/Bonn and Milan Malpensa in Europe, as well as to Chicago and Oakland near San Francisco in the USA. Miller says the new routes will be opened as the fleet grows, adding that Oasis plans to have five 747-400s by the end of 2007. Oakland is expected to be its second destination.

Oasis’s main shareholders are real estate magnate Raymond Lee and telecommunications equipment mogul Allan Wong.

http://www.flightglobal.com/Articles...+date+for.html
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Old Posted Sep 8, 2006, 6:06 PM
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Stockton to Mexico air plans go from no to maybe

REED FUJII
Record Staff Writer
Published Friday, Sep 8, 2006

In May, U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials said no to Stockton Metropolitan Airport’s plans for a $2 million inspection station at the terminal, effectively killing plans for Stockton to Guadalajara service this fall. Officials have now reversed course, raising optimism among county officials.

STOCKTON - Hopes to bring international flight service to Stockton Metropolitan Airport were revived this week as U.S. customs officials reversed an earlier rejection of plans for an inspection station at the airport terminal.

San Joaquin County officials, who oversee airport operations, hailed the news.

"Where the door was locked and shut with duct tape around it, but now the duct tape is off. The door is not open, but I see some light shining through," county Supervisor Steve Gutierrez said Thursday.

The county had drafted plans for a $2 million inspection station to accommodate Aeromexico Airlines service to Guadalajara this fall but was stymied in May, when U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials in San Francisco declined to authorize the facility.

Reps. Dennis Cardoza, D-Merced, and Richard Pombo, R-Tracy, weighed in, however, and customs officials in Washington, D.C., recently said the project, with certain revisions, can go forward.

"The Stockton airport is part of our regional transportation system. By offering more flights out of Stockton, folks in the Valley will no longer have to fight traffic by driving all the way to Oakland or Sacramento," Pombo said Thursday in an e-mail. "I welcome CBP's recognition of Stockton airport's potential and its vital role in the region's transportation system."

Gutierrez, who said he's long encouraged establishment of Stockton-to-Mexico air service while not advocating for any specific commercial carrier, hopes the full Board of Supervisors decides to invest in the customs facility. Federal grants are expected to cover up to 95 percent of the facility's costs, but the county needs to collect airport fees to offset its share.

It might take three to four years for the county to get into the black on the deal, he said.

"It's going to take awhile, but there's so much benefit that we gain just in providing a service to the traveler that wants to travel to Mexico," he said.

He sees planned Aeromexico service as an important complement to Allegiant Air, currently the airport's only scheduled carrier, which provides leisure-travel flights to Las Vegas.

"The real question is, What is the vision of our leadership and our policy-makers?" Gutierrez asked. "What is the vision for our airport?

He answered: "This one county supervisor wants an airport with a level of service that attracts consumers."

Stockton is still attractive to Aeromexico, which had hoped to begin at least three flights a week in November, said Airport Director Barry Rondinella.

"I have been in contact with Aeromexico just to verify they are still interested," he said Thursday. "They are very interested."

However, Rondinella admitted, there remains a lot of work for a customs inspection station to be built at the airport.

A call to the airline Thursday was not returned.

An Aug. 25 letter from the Customs and Border Protection's Office of Congressional Affairs to local legislators said the inspection station's design failed to meet certain size and space standards.

"We look forward to working with the Stockton Metropolitan Airport to further define our facility requirements in order to meet their service needs," wrote Thaddeus Bingel, a Customs and Border Protection assistant commissioner.

"What was a 'no' is now a 'Hey, we want to work with you anyway we can,' " Rondinella said. "We've got to work, pick up the pieces and figure out where we go from where."

He is working through the legislators' offices to get more specifics on the customs agency's design requirements and turn them into revised construction plans and new cost estimates.

"Until we find out from CBP specifically what their concerns with our designs are then we won't know how it's going to affect the cost," he said.
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  #11  
Old Posted Sep 11, 2006, 3:58 PM
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SFO was battered by so many things at once-right around the time all the new construction was winding down-but it seems things are getting back on track!

9/11: FIVE YEARS LATER
SFO's business still turbulent
Although ridership has been gradually bouncing back, passenger load remains down about 10 percent from 2000

David Armstrong, Chronicle Staff Writer

Sunday, September 10, 2006

The Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks took place 3,000 miles away, but the effect is still being felt at a decidedly changed San Francisco International Airport.

Like all airports in North America, SFO was closed to commercial aviation for several days after Sept. 11. When the planes started flying again, it reopened to a very different aviation environment.

Five years after the attacks, SFO -- Northern California's busiest airport and one of the nation's major gateways to Asia -- is home to fewer airlines, fewer passengers and fewer flights than before Sept. 11. Forced to operate with suddenly reduced revenue, SFO put several major construction projects on hold and cut its staff by a third.

And SFO, like other American airports, bristles with stricter security than it did before the attacks. All told, SFO spent $150 million to beef up security, with the federal government reimbursing about $50 million.

Over the past two years, SFO has gradually been recovering, according to spokesman Michael McCarron, although the initial shock was severe.

"Our business was down dramatically,'' McCarron recalled, saying the falloff began before Sept. 11. "Six months prior to that, the dot-com boom collapsed, and that summer of 2001, business was down. Then came Sept. 11.''

From handling 41 million passengers in 2000, when it was one of the world's 10 busiest airports, SFO plummeted to 29 million passengers in 2001.

Shortly afterward, the SARS outbreak in Asia and Toronto, the Iraq war and avian flu further hampered business. But, buoyed by a surprisingly strong global economy and pent-up demand for travel, civil aviation gradually began to recover.

This year, driven by surging demand for international travel, SFO officials expect nearly 37 million passengers. International traffic is growing by about 4 percent a year, according to McCarron, though domestic demand is still flat. Free-spending international fliers account for 25 percent of SFO passengers and generate 42 percent of its passenger revenue.

SFO, like most U.S. airports, has not fully recaptured the lucrative business traveler, who typically books flights at the last minute and pays a high fare. Such travelers now often drive to their destinations or use e-mail or videoconferencing instead of flying, said Kevin Mitchell, head of the Business Travel Coalition, a trade organization for corporate travel planners.

Nationwide, "the high-yield business traveler traffic is approximately 50 percent of what it was prior to 9/11,'' according to a coalition report released Sept. 1.

Still, travelers are learning to live with a certain amount of risk, and many people have to fly, especially if they are going overseas for business or leisure. Even the high oil prices of the past few years -- which drive up airlines' operating expenses and raise air fares -- have not stopped the recovery, though they may be slowing the pace.

The devastating confluence of Sept. 11 and the dot-com bust came just after SFO had taken on substantial bond debt to finance a just-completed $1 billion international terminal -- the biggest terminal in the United States at 2.5 million square feet -- and was ramping up to build a new airport hotel, renovate the former international terminal for domestic use and reconfigure runways to handle traffic that had mushroomed in the late 1990s.

The sky was the limit -- or so it seemed. The dot-com collapse and the terrorist attacks changed all that.

Like other U.S. airports, SFO's post-Sept. 11 credit rating suffered. Standard & Poor's, for example, dropped SFO's credit rating from A+ with a stable outlook to A with a negative outlook in September 2001, according to S&P analyst Kurt Forsgren.

The weak Bay Area economy, SFO's paucity of thriving low-cost carriers that provide consumer choice and its reliance on ailing United Airlines, which handles about half of all passengers and flights at the airport, drove the S&P downgrade, Forsgren said.

"We had a large mortgage on a home no one was coming to live in, basically,'' McCarron said of the dark days right after Sept. 11.

SFO, accordingly, put the terminal renovation -- expected to cost $150 million to $160 million -- on hold. It also set aside plans for the hotel, and reduced staff from 1,800 employees to below 1,200.

Additionally, SFO lowered landing fees for airlines and reduced rents for airport retailers and restaurateurs struggling during the downturn. "It would do us no good to have them go out of business,'' McCarron said, adding that their rents have returned to normal in the past year.

But SFO's efforts to lure low-fare airlines, which have grabbed increasing market share from traditional carriers such as United in recent years, have been spotty.

United rolled out its own low-fare unit Ted at SFO in 2004, but discount leader Southwest Airlines pulled out of SFO, fledgling discount carrier Independence Air stayed aloft for less than a year and discounter ATA decamped from SFO to Oakland -- a growing rival ruled chiefly by such low-cost carriers as Southwest and JetBlue Airways.

Meanwhile, Virgin America, a planned low-fare airline that announced SFO will be its headquarters back in June 2004, has yet to win the Federal Aviation Administration's certification to fly.

While SFO struggled in a radically changed business environment, it scrambled to keep up with the post-Sept. 11 need for intensified security.

The National Guard, patrolling the airport immediately after Sept. 11, is remembered for an incident in which a guardsman shot himself in the buttocks while holstering his weapon.

When the new Department of Homeland Security put its Transportation Security Administration in charge, SFO had to let go of most of its baggage screeners. Many were Philippine citizens who lacked newly required U.S. citizenship, and some couldn't pass tests for English proficiency, said the TSA's Edward Gomez, federal security director at SFO.

About 150 of the 1,000 baggage screeners at SFO are holdovers, Gomez said, and are employed under TSA guidelines by private contractor Covenant Aviation. SFO is "by far the largest'' of the seven U.S. airports using private screeners, he said. Others use TSA employees.

McCarron said lines to pass through security checkpoints take on average seven or eight minutes -- much less time than at many other U.S. and foreign airports. He also said that private contractors give SFO flexibility in scheduling, which shortens customers' wait times. Gomez agreed, saying the airlines give the TSA daily estimates of how many passengers have booked flights, which allows security officials to schedule baggage screeners accordingly.

On a recent weekday afternoon, United passenger William Hill said he found the wait acceptable at SFO's international terminal, where he planned to board a flight to Beijing. "It's not too bad,'' he said. "At least it's moving, which is more than I can say for Newark (N.J.), where I must have waited for an hour and a half. The people here (screeners) are pretty nice, too. They're usually polite.''

The TSA uses plainclothes air marshals to observe passengers before they board planes, looking for unusual behavior that could betray potential troublemakers, Gomez said. SFO also employs 1,400 closed circuit video cameras, the most of any airport in the country, to monitor people in the terminals, and boasts this country's first explosive detection system for X-raying every checked bag, not just a sampling.

"We have layered security levels,'' Gomez said. "A lot of what we do, the public doesn't see. We need to be unpredictable in what we do.''

New regulations restricting the type of liquids and gels in carry-on luggage -- prompted by the Aug. 10 plot in Britain to blow up U.S.-bound jetliners -- are the latest security wrinkle.

McCarron says the public has largely been cooperative and seems well-informed about the use of liquids in carry-ons, but acknowledged that tighter rules have hurt some SFO retailers who sell liquid products. He cited terminal 3's Body Shop and a wine store as businesses whose trade has been hurt in recent weeks.

But the worst seems to be over for SFO, McCarron said, pointing out that SFO's credit ratings have recently edged upward. Standard & Poor's and Moody's give A ratings with stable outlooks to SFO. Fitch Ratings gives SFO a slightly better A1 with a stable outlook.

When the largest tenant, United, slid into bankruptcy in December 2002, "there were some nail-biting days,'' McCarron said. But United "never fell behind in their payments'' on any rented facilities at SFO, a United creditor that had observer status in Bankruptcy Court. The Chicago airline emerged from Chapter 11 on Feb. 1 and posted its first profit in six years in the second quarter.

Even during its three-year journey through Chapter 11, United began service between SFO and Beijing and between SFO and Ho Chi Minh City via Hong Kong. Next year, it plans to resume service between SFO and Seoul.

All this is in line with broad trends at SFO, where about 45 percent of the airport's 8.2 million international fliers come from or go to Asia -- led by booming China and India and prosperous Japan.

Indeed, international travel is strong worldwide, according to the trade organization Airports Council International, which reported a 5 percent rise in international travel for July 2006 from July 2005. Domestic traffic was flat, the council reported.

With its strong position as an international gateway to Asia and Europe, SFO is well-situated, McCarron said.

And while passenger confidence ebbs and flows with reported security threats such as last month's alleged United Kingdom bombing plot, the slow economic recovery appears to still be on track, McCarron said.

"The latest hiccup didn't have much effect on us after the first 48 hours,'' McCarron said of the bombing plot, which caused chaos at London's Heathrow airport. "Traffic remained strong throughout the rest of the summer. We're seeing the usual post-Labor Day slump, but nothing big. People want to keep moving on with their lives. They don't want to be scared.''



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The impact on SFO
The Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, along with the dot-com bust, caused a drop in passenger traffic from 41 million passengers in 2000 to 29 million passengers a year later.

The airport has had to shelve such projects as a new airport hotel and renovated terminal. Combined with political opposition, unstable finances also stayed a reconfiguration of its runways.

It cut its staff by a third.

It has had to spend $150 million to beef up security; a third of the cost was reimbursed by the federal government.

E-mail David Armstrong at [email protected].
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Old Posted Sep 11, 2006, 4:47 PM
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Looking back, looking ahead
Is San Joaquin County ready for Bay Area disaster?


Alex Breitler
Record Staff Writer
Published Monday, Sep 11, 2006

STOCKTON - Stockton-area emergency workers have enough to worry about: Levees could crumble, dams could burst, and everyone knows how hot it got this summer.

But could they handle someone else's disaster?

For nearly a decade, county Office of Emergency Services leaders have pushed for a regional plan in case of a mass evacuation from, perhaps, the Bay Area. Such a scenario, prompted by a natural disaster or Sept. 11-style terrorist attack, could see 100,000 or more people pouring over the hills into the San Joaquin Valley.

Even after the fall of the World Trade Center five years ago today, progress on this plan has been slow. As many as eight counties and the state have been involved; bureaucratic battles ensued over the roles each should play.

"We hadn't seen as much advance planning as we wanted," said Ron Baldwin of the San Joaquin OES. "It was a little frustrating."

The Valley isn't alone. Just last year, Bay Area leaders from 10 counties announced the formation of their first regional disaster plan, a plan they admitted should have been made a quarter century earlier.

It's long past due, warns the Rev. Roger Rickman, a Tracy pastor trained in homeland security. He has lobbied for emergency training in every city down to individual neighborhoods. He fears that the south county, in particular, must be prepared for crowds surging over the Interstate 580 corridor.

If it happened today, Rickman said, "I think we'd be in bad shape."

There is no designated sanctuary for refugees of a Bay Area disaster.

But Hurricane Katrina illustrated an important principle: Many evacuees will travel only as far as they must. They'll stick as close to home as they can, and for Bay Area dwellers, that could mean San Joaquin County.

Katrina's huge evacuation - and the lessons learned from it - kick-started Baldwin's regional plan, and today, some progress has been made.

Roughly $70,000 has been spent in San Joaquin County on equipment needed for mass evacuations - radio transmitters mounted on trailers, gadgets allowing stranded motorists to refuel from gas trucks and safety vests for traffic officers.

The plan, still awaiting state approval, includes checkpoints along major routes. Vans and buses would wait for those whose cars have conked out; ambulances would assist the sick and injured; and tow trucks and fuel tenders would be at the ready. Law enforcement officers would maintain order and, above all, keep traffic moving.

Citizens should be part of these large-scale plans, argues Rickman, the pastor. He wants thousands of citizens and neighbors, many of whom have valuable skills, trained to assist not only in San Joaquin but across the nation.

"They can be called to come and help the first responders and police redirect the surge - minimize the death, minimize the destruction of property, minimize the panic as much as you can," Rickman said.

All these refugees will need somewhere to stay.

Large facilities such as the San Joaquin County Fairgrounds could be used as shelters, accommodating up to 10,000 people, Baldwin said. An estimated 20 percent of Bay Area refugees would require shelter.

Baldwin also is working with real estate agents in search of vacant commercial buildings that could, in a pinch, serve as shelters. American Red Cross officials, meanwhile, are seeking partnerships with churches, such as Crossroads Grace Community Church in Manteca, which has agreed to take in evacuees.

"We're looking at doing business a little better than we have before," said Lee Veselak, director of emergency services for the Red Cross in San Joaquin County.

Disaster drills have become more frequent at Sutter Tracy Community Hospital, a spokeswoman said, adding that area hospitals would work together to make best use of a limited number of beds.


The Delta Blood Bank would be busy as well. Donated blood is generally used within days or weeks, meaning frequent donations are needed to keep the bank prepared for a disaster at any given time.

Not to be forgotten are the long-term effects of a Bay Area catastrophe. After an earthquake, for instance, crumbled highways and railways would require many San Francisco-based businesses to relocate to the East Bay.

"It's very easy to see that there could be, over the long term, more demand for housing" in the Valley, said Jeanne Perkins, an earthquake expert for the Association of Bay Area Governments.

Stockton schools could provide temporary shelter for a few evacuees, but there's not much room for more children in the classroom on a long-term basis, said Stockton Unified School District spokeswoman Dianne Barth.

From crisis to aftermath, officials agree there's much to talk about. Some of these conversations began five years ago today inside Stockton City Hall, said Mayor Ed Chavez; the discussions are ongoing.

"I think there has been a considerable amount of thought and planning that has gone into the what-ifs," Chavez said. "People should feel comfortable that those issues have been addressed."

Rickman, though, is not comfortable. His church, Fresh Anointing Faith International, is planning a new building along Interstate 5 designed in part to host 3,000 evacuees.

The Altamont Pass already is a bottleneck on weekday afternoons. But in a disaster?

"We'd have five times the number of people, with their eyes wide open and pure fear driving them," Rickman said. "We're in the surge path, and I don't think anyone's got an answer for it right now."

Contact reporter Alex Breitler at (209) 239-6606 or [email protected]
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Old Posted Sep 11, 2006, 9:59 PM
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i'm still waiting for SFO to renovate Terminal 2. Does anyone have a timeline for construction?
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  #14  
Old Posted Sep 12, 2006, 1:02 AM
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yeah, and who would the tenant be?
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Old Posted Sep 12, 2006, 1:24 AM
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yeah, and who would the tenant be?
Virgin America
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  #16  
Old Posted Sep 13, 2006, 5:38 PM
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Anyone know if there's going to be (or already has been) construction at the Powell BART station to accomodate the new entrances for the Westfield mall expansion?
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Old Posted Sep 13, 2006, 5:59 PM
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Originally Posted by rs913
Anyone know if there's going to be (or already has been) construction at the Powell BART station to accomodate the new entrances for the Westfield mall expansion?
"Shoppers will be able to enter the megamall on Market, Fifth and Mission streets. There will be an additional entrance into the expanded space for BART and Muni riders. "

Source: http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cg...6/BLOOMIES.TMP

I admit I haven't gone down into Powell St. Station to see if they have yet built a new entrance but the new and old sections of the mall are open to one another on every floor--it'll be one big mall now--and, as I'm sure you know, there's already a station-level entrance to the existing section.
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Old Posted Sep 13, 2006, 8:18 PM
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it's under construction.
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Old Posted Sep 16, 2006, 7:48 AM
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OK so I'm a bit confused as to the exact location of this station. Is it going in around Stoneridge? Or will it be even further west in that no-mans land between D/P and Castro Valley?

Here's a link to a Google Map of the area.
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=e...61018&t=h&om=1
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Old Posted Sep 16, 2006, 11:44 AM
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It is going in around Stonebridge. It is the vacant ground shown in the satellite picture that is North and South of the Freeway between Foothill and 680. It is interesting that they say in the article that it is in the middle of the 10 mile gap. It is right at about 2 miles for the Dublin/Pleasanton station.

I took BART to the airport last Friday night. I am currently in Sydney. When we went past the site, you could see construction equipment in the vacant area North of the freeway. It is good to see this finally get started. The date for the start had been slipping for a long time.
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